Rania bibi
Uol( 4th year optometry student
   The term hypermetropia is derived from
    hyper meaning “In excess” met meaning
    “measure” & opia meaning “of the eye”.
   Also called hyperopia / longsightedness
DEFINITION
 It is the refractive state of eye where in
  parallel rays of light coming from infinity are
  focused      behind      the    retina     with
  accommodation being at rest
 The posterior focal point is behind the
  retina which receives a blurred image
ETIOLOGY
1) AXIAL
 Most common
 Total refractive power of eye is normal
 Axial shortening of eyeball
 1mm short- 3 D of HM
 Physiologically more than 6D HM are
   uncommon
 At birth +2.5 – 3 D of HM (physiologically)
 Pathologically seen in cases like orbital
   tumour, inflammatory mass , oedema,
   coloboma and microphthalmos.
2) CURVATURAL
 Flattening of cornea, lens or both
 1mm increase in Radius of curvature-
   RESULTS IN 6D of HM
 Never exceed 6D HM physiologically
 Congenitally flattened (cornea plana)
 Result (trauma and disease )
3) INDEX
 Change in refractive index with age
 Physiologically in old age
 Pathologically in diabetics under treatment
4)POSITIONAL
 Posteriorly placed crystalline lens
 Occurs as congenital anomaly
 Result of trauma or disease
5)ABSENCE OF LENS
 Seen in aphakia
CLINICAL TYPES
 SIMPLE HYPERMETROPIA,
 PATHOLOGICAL
 FUNCTIONAL HYPEROPIA
SIMPLE HYPERMETROPIA
 Commonest form
 Results from normal biological variations
  in the development of eyeball
 Include axial and curvatural HM
 May be hereditary
PATHOLOGICAL HYPERMETROPIA
 Anomalies lie outside the limits of biological
  variation
 Acquired hypermetropia
    Decrease curvature of outer lens fibers in old age
     Cortical sclerosis
 Positional hypermetropia
 Aphakia
 Consecutive hypermetropia
FUNCTIONAL HYPERMETROPIA
 Results from paralysis of
  accommodation
   Seen in patients with 3rd nerve paralysis
    & internal ophthalmoplegia
OPTICAL CONDITION
   Parallel rays focus behind retina
   Diffusion circles produce blurred &
    indistinct images
   Retina is nearer to nodal point
   Image is smaller than in emmetropic
   Rays diverge from retina
   Formation of clear image is possible only
    when converging power of eye is increased
NOMENCLATURE
 TOTAL HYPERMETROPIA=
LATENT + MANIFEST
         (facultative + absolute)
TOTAL HYPERMETROPIA
   It is the total amount of refractive
    error,estimated after complete
    cycloplegia with atropine
   Divided into latent & manifest
LATENT HYPERMETROPIA
   Corrected by inherent tone of ciliary
    muscle
   Usually about 1D
   High in children
   Decreases with age
   Revealed after abolishing tone of ciliary
    muscle with atropine
MANIFEST
HYPERMETROPIA
 Remaining part of total hypermetropia
 Correct by accommodation and convex lens
 Measure by add strongest lens with max. vision
 Consists of facultative & absolute
FACULTATIVE HYPERMETROPIA
 Corrected by patients accommodative effort
ABSOLUTE HYPERMETROPIA
 Residual part not corrected by patients
  accommodative effort
  Absolute hypermetropia can be measured by
  the weakest convex lens with which maximum
  visual acuity
    MANIFEST HYPERMETROPIA
    CONT…
 Manifest HM – absolute HM = Facultative HM
(Strongest lens) – (weakest lens)
 Total HM – Manifest HM = Latent HM
NORMAL AGE VARIATION
    At birth +2+3D HM
   Slightly increase in one year of life,
   Gradually diminished untill by the age 5-10
    years
    In old age after 50 year again tendency to HM
   Ton of ciliary muscle decreases
   Accommodative power decreases
   Some amount of latent HM become manifest
   More amount of facultative HM become
    absolute
   Practically after 65 year all of it become
    absolute
              SYMPTOMS
 Principal symptom is blurring of vision for close
  work
 Symptoms vary depending upon age of patient
  & degree of refractive error
ASYMPTOMATIC
 small error produces no symptoms
 Corrected by accommodation of patient
ASTHENOPIA
 Refractive error are fully corrected by
  accommodative effort
 Thus vision is normal
 Sustained accommodation produces
  symptoms
 Asthenopia increases as day progresses
 Increased after prolonged near work
SYMPTOMS
            Tiredness
            Frontal or fronto temporal headache
            Watering
            Mild photophobia
DEFECTIVE VISION WITH ASTHENOPIA
   Not corrected by accommodation
   Defective vision for near more than
    distance
   Asthenopia due to sustained
    accommodation
   Refractive error more(>4D)
DEFECTIVE VISION ONLY
 Refractive vision more than 4D
 Adults usually do not accommodate
 Marked defective vision for near and
  distance
SIGNS
   VISUAL ACUITY : Defective
   EYEBALL: small or normal in size
   CORNEA : may be smaller than normal.
    There can be CORNEA PLANA
   ANTERIOR CHAMBER : may be
    shallow
   LENS: could be dislocated backwards
   A Scan ultrasonography (biometry)
    reveal short axial length
FUNDUS:
A) DISC: Dark reddish color, irregular
   margins ,confused with Papillitis so
   termed as PSEUDO-PAPILLITIS
B) MACULA: Situated further from the disc
   than usual
C) BLOOD VESSELS: Show undue twists &
   abnormal branchings
TREATMENT
BASIS FOR TREATMENT
 No Treatment
 Error is small
 Asymptomatic
 Visual acuity normal
 No muscular imbalance
COMPLICATION
 Recurrent styes ,blepharitis or chalazia
 Accommodative convergent squint
 Amblyopia
    Anisometropic
    Strabismic
    Uncorrective bilateral high hypermetropia
   Predisposition to develop primary narrow
    angle glaucomas
         Care should be taken while instilling
    mydriatics
Young children(<6 or 7yrs)
 Some degree of hypermetropia is physiological so
  no correction
 Treatment required if error is high or strabismus is
  present
   working in school small error may require
  correction
 In children error tends normally to diminish with
  growth so refraction should be carried out every
  six month and if necessary the correction should
  be reduced, ortherwise a lens which is
  overcorrecting their error may induce an artificial
  myopia
 No deduction of tonus allowance in strabismus
                      ADULTS
 If symptoms of eye-strain are marked,we
  correct as much of the total hypermetropia
  as possible,trying as far as we can to relieve
  the accommodation
 When there is spasm of accommodation we
  correct the whole of the error
 Some patients with hypermetropia do not
  initially tolerate the full correction indicated
  by manifest refraction so we undercorrect
  them
 Exophoria hyperopia should be under
  correct by 1 to 2D
 Patients with absolute hypermetropia
  are more likely to accept nearly the full
  correction because they typically
  experience immediate improvement in
  visual acuity
 In   pathological hypermetropia the
  underlying cause rather than the
  hypermetropia is chief concern
MODE OF TREATMENT
   SPECTACLES
                   OPTICAL TREATMENT
   CONTACT LENS
   SURGICAL
SPECTACLES
Basic principle
  Prescribe convex lenses(Plus lenses)
  so that rays are brought to focus on the
  retina
Advantages
 Comfortable
 Easier method
 Less expensive
 Safe idea
CONTACT LENS
ADVANTAGES
Cosmetically good
Increased field of view
Less magnification
Elimination of aberrations & prismatic
   effect
PHOTOREFRACTIVE
KERATECTOMY(PRK)
 Direct laser ablation of corneal stroma
  after removal of corneal epithelium
  mechanically
 Done using EXCIMER LASER
LASER IN SITU
KERATOMILEUSIS(LASIK)
   Anterior flap of cornea lifted with
    keratome and excimer laser is used to
    sculpt the stromal bed to change the
    refractive error of eye
   It can correct up to 4D of hypermetropia
    and 8D of astigmatism
VISUAL HYGIENE
   While reading or doing intensive near work
    take a break about every 30 min
   When reading maintain proper distance
    that is the book should be at least as far
    from your eyes as your elbow when you
    make a fist and hold it against your nose
   Sufficient Illumination
   Place a limit spent watching television &
    watching videogames
   Sit 5-6 feet away from the television
 Appropriate optical correction almost
  always leads to clear and comfortable
  single binocular vision
 Younger children who have significant
  hyperopia associated with amblyopia,
  strabismus,or anisometropia require
  treatment, starting as early as 3-6
  months of age
CONCLUSION
   Hyperopia is a common refractive disorder
    that has been overshadowed by myopia in
    public perception,vision research & the
    scientific literature
   Although uncorrected myopia has a greater
    adverse effect on visual acuity than
    uncorrected hyperopia,the close
    association between hyperopia,amblyopia
    & strabismus,especially in children,makes
    hyperopia a greater risk factor for more
    permanent vision loss than myopia
   The early diagnosis & treatment of
    significant hyperopia & its
    consequences can prevent a significant
    amount of visual disability in the general
    population